Particular places (i.e Antartica) will be either closer or further away depending on the time of year. But if you are counting the whole earth then yes, it remains the same I think.
This statement is incorrect. Earth's angular momentum remains constant throughout its orbit around the Sun. Although Earth moves faster when it is closer to the Sun due to Kepler's second law of planetary motion, this is balanced by its greater distance from the Sun when it is farthest, resulting in a constant angular momentum.
Fossils
Meteorites.
The distannce from Earth to Uranus is:19.2 miles x earths distancewhich is 1,747,200,000
it can show a rocks age and what it has gone through
how does earths distance from the sun change throughout the year
1. Tilt of earths axis 2. Earths axis remains parallel throughout its yearly orbit.
The distance between two objects may be distorted
A map scale.
This statement is incorrect. Earth's angular momentum remains constant throughout its orbit around the Sun. Although Earth moves faster when it is closer to the Sun due to Kepler's second law of planetary motion, this is balanced by its greater distance from the Sun when it is farthest, resulting in a constant angular momentum.
Earth's average distance from the Sun is about 93 million miles, or 150 million kilometers. This distance can vary slightly throughout the year due to the elliptical shape of Earth's orbit around the Sun.
Meteorites.
93000000 miles
Infinity
Moon and earth distance
Fossils
Meteorites.